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AJC Governing Council To
Hear Dr. Kenneth Clark
See Story on Page Five
ARAB CHIEFS CALL
DECEMBER PARLEY
CAIRO�A conference of Arab leaders will be held early in December, either
in Cairo or in the Moroccan capital of Rabat, it has been announced by Arab
League Officials.
VOL. XXIII No. 15 Thursday, November 30, 1967 Price Ten Cents
Israel Emergency Fund
For 1968 Voted By CJP
Responding to the continuing critical problems
faced by Israel, the Board of Trustees of the Com-
bined Jewish Philanthropies of Greater Boston gave
overwhelming approval this week to establishment
of a 1968 Israel Emergency Fund campaign.
Meeting at the Hebrew Teachers
College, in Brookline, on Tuesday
Your
action bank
now
COMPOUNDS
INTEREST
QUARTERLY
on
one year
THRIFT
CERTIFICATES
available in multiples of $1,000
Action banking for action people.
Interest at 5% � compounded
quarterly � payable annually at
maturity. Interest rate guaranteed
for 12 months. Exempt from
Mass. Income Tax.
Norfolk
County Trust
COMPANY
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
and Federal Reserve System
evening, the trustees endorsed a
recommendation of the Executive
Committee that contributors in 1968
be asked to make maximum gifts
to both the "regular" CJP Appeal
and to a special Emergency Fund
effort.
Bernard D. Grossman, president
of the CJP, stated at the meeting that
similar action had been taken or was
being proposed in every major Jew-
ish community throughout the United
States and Canada in an effort to
raise sums that would exceed the
Emergency Fund results following
the Six-day War in June.
The action by the trustees was
given added impetus by a first-
hand report on the situation in
Israel by Etert Rabinowitz, 1968
General Campaign Chairman, and
David Casty, Big Gifts Chairman,
who recently completed a special
fact-finding mission at the request
Continued on Page Twelve
At the meeting, the Arab chiefs
of state are expected to try to agree
on how to respond to the United Na-
tions Security Council resolution
on the Middle East crisis and to study
how to get Israel to surrender Arab
territory that she has occupied since
the war in June.
The fact that agreement on the
conference was reached so swiftly
was seen by authoritative Arab ob-
servers as indicating a new climate
DeGaulle Asks
For Israeli
Withdrawal
PARIS, (JTA)--President
Charles DeGaulle, launch-
ing his most bitter attack
against Israel, called the
country a "war-like state
determined to expand on
any pretext."
He declared that the only solu-
tion to the Middle East problem
must be one based on the evacua-
tion of Israel "from territories
taken by force" and agreed to by
the big powers � United States,
Russia, Great Britain and France.
The French President spoke be-
fore more than 1,000 newsmen, dip-
lomats and members of the govern-
ment who packed the Elysee Palace
Continued on Page Twelve
News Highlights
ALLON REQUESTS FORTIFICATION
TEL AVIV, (JTA) � Gen. Yigal Allon, a hero
of Israel's War of Liberation in 1948 and Minister
of Labor in the Israel Government, called for the
"rapid consolidation and fortification of Israel's pres-
ent borders" to counter the stand taken by President
Nasser of Egypt in his bellicose speech to the Egyptian
National Assembly.
Gen. Allon said that the Nasser
speech was " an aggressive attempt
to cover up a pathetic situation,"
but he warned that' * we cannot ignore
his threats." Israel's cease-fire
FIVE
NO NOTICE REQUIRED for WITHDRAWAL
OUR DIVIDENDS ARE NOT SUBJECT TO STATE INCOME TAX
SAVINGS INSURED BY A U.S. GOV'T AGENCY
SEND for FREE SAVE-BY-MAIL KIT ^^StSE^
HOME OWNERS FEDERAL SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
21 MILK ST. Boston HU 2-0630 MAIN OFFICE
borders are more secure today, he
said, but new settlements should be
established in strategic areas.
(In London, the Israel Chief of
Staff, Gen. Itzhak Rabin, told British
newsmen, that Israel was "ready for
any eventuality." He said it was
"a bad thing that Nasser wants war,
but it is a good thing for people
to realize that he does." He said
that "we hope for peace, but we
are prepared for war.")
(Gen. Rabin reported that some
of the war material which Egypt had
received from the Soviet Union since
the June war was superior to the
equipment the Egyptian Army had
used before the hostilities.)
JARRING AT U.N.
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (JTA)�
Ambassador Gunnar Jarring, who
will be the Secretary - General's
special representative in the Middle
East, conferred here with U Thant
_____ Continued on Page Twelve
RE 4-5000
RED CAB
of unity among Arab governments.
Weeks of bickering passed before
Arab leaders agreed to hold their
last conference in August at Khar-
toum, in the Sudan.
The meeting in December, like the
one in August, is expected to be
boycotted by the extreme left-wing
Government of Syria, although the
head of the Arab League's secre-
tariat Sayed Nofal, announced with-
out qualification that "agreement
had been reached" that leaders
should convene not later than, De-
cember 9.
Mr. NofaTs announcement, made
through the Egyptian government
press agency, named both Cairo
and Rabat as possible meeting plac-
es, but Rabat was considered the
likelier choice. The conference is
expected to be preceded by a two-
day meeting of foreign ministers.
The convening of the conference
was given impetus by President
Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt in a
speech to the Egyptian National As-
sembly on Thursday. Addressing
the Arab world, he said "the de-
cision of the Security Council repre-
sents a development that we have
to discuss and examine together."
Mr. Nasser termed the resolution
"not sufficient" as a basis for
peace in the Middle East.
One of the points expected to be
discussed by Arab leaders is how to
Continued on Page Six
Israel Bonds Aims For
Record Sale Of $1 Million
The $1 million objective of Action Day for Israel
can be achieved following the record Israel Bond
sales in fifty communities throughout Greater Boston
last Sunday, it was announced this week by Lawrence
G. Laskey, general chairman, State of Israel Bonds.
For the rest of this week, vol-
unteers are expected to call on
prospects so that complete and full
coverage will be obtained�for the
purpose of selling as many Israel
Bonds as possible. This coming
Sunday is Report Sunday, the final
day in the Action Day effort, and
the last opportunity to achieve the
$1 million goal for Israel, Mr.
Laskey said.
Never in the history of the com-
munity has there been such an
outpouring of cooperation to help
strengthen Israel's war-weakened
economy through the purchase of
Israel Bonds, Mr. Laskey pointed
out.
Besides the veritable army of
men and women volunteers who vis-
ited Jewish families, scores of per-
sons went to Action Day headquart-
ers to make their purchases. It was
an unprecedented community-wide
response to Israel's urgent request
for increased amounts of Israel
Bond dollars to bolster the economy
that was dealt a severe blow by the
crisis of mobilization and war.
The volunteers were young,
middle-aged and old. Some of them
have worked for Israel in every
Action Day conducted in the com-
munity. For some it was the first
time as a volunteer. There were
many volunteers who worked in the
early Action Days�and after an
absence of several years and be-
cause of Israel's dire need for in-
vestment dollars�worked as vol-
unteers last Sunday. For all, there
was the common bond�to work
for Israel by selling Israel Bonds
to help strengthen Israel.
Continued on Page Twelve
Arab Refugee
Family Reunion
Plan Begins
JERICHO ~ Israel re-
admitted a handful ofpros-
perous Arabs to the West
Bank as she inaugurated
a new program for the re-
union of families divided
by the Six-Day War of June.
Seven persons crossed the Allenby
Bridge to the West Bank area,
while the usual daily flow of about
200 departing Arabs crossed in the
opposite direction.
Continued on Page Twelve
State Of Affairs: by emanuel goldberg
Romney Religion
The other day, a British newspaperman wrote
an article about George Romney which attempted
to explain the Michigan Governor's "unabashed search
for morality" and seeming preoccupation with religion.
It's an unmistakable sign of new times
when experts have to dissect such
motivation for the curious public, es- .
pecially when Romney critic scan remark B Jm
that "there's too much of an All-
American look of integrity and clean I
living about the Romney image."
The Governor was described as a man with the
zeal of a preacher and the determination never
to make a major decision "without kneeling in
Continued on Page Twelve

User has an obligation to determine copyright or other use restrictions prior to publication or distribution. Please contact the archives at reference@ajhsboston.org or 617-226-1245 for more information.

AJC Governing Council To
Hear Dr. Kenneth Clark
See Story on Page Five
ARAB CHIEFS CALL
DECEMBER PARLEY
CAIRO�A conference of Arab leaders will be held early in December, either
in Cairo or in the Moroccan capital of Rabat, it has been announced by Arab
League Officials.
VOL. XXIII No. 15 Thursday, November 30, 1967 Price Ten Cents
Israel Emergency Fund
For 1968 Voted By CJP
Responding to the continuing critical problems
faced by Israel, the Board of Trustees of the Com-
bined Jewish Philanthropies of Greater Boston gave
overwhelming approval this week to establishment
of a 1968 Israel Emergency Fund campaign.
Meeting at the Hebrew Teachers
College, in Brookline, on Tuesday
Your
action bank
now
COMPOUNDS
INTEREST
QUARTERLY
on
one year
THRIFT
CERTIFICATES
available in multiples of $1,000
Action banking for action people.
Interest at 5% � compounded
quarterly � payable annually at
maturity. Interest rate guaranteed
for 12 months. Exempt from
Mass. Income Tax.
Norfolk
County Trust
COMPANY
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
and Federal Reserve System
evening, the trustees endorsed a
recommendation of the Executive
Committee that contributors in 1968
be asked to make maximum gifts
to both the "regular" CJP Appeal
and to a special Emergency Fund
effort.
Bernard D. Grossman, president
of the CJP, stated at the meeting that
similar action had been taken or was
being proposed in every major Jew-
ish community throughout the United
States and Canada in an effort to
raise sums that would exceed the
Emergency Fund results following
the Six-day War in June.
The action by the trustees was
given added impetus by a first-
hand report on the situation in
Israel by Etert Rabinowitz, 1968
General Campaign Chairman, and
David Casty, Big Gifts Chairman,
who recently completed a special
fact-finding mission at the request
Continued on Page Twelve
At the meeting, the Arab chiefs
of state are expected to try to agree
on how to respond to the United Na-
tions Security Council resolution
on the Middle East crisis and to study
how to get Israel to surrender Arab
territory that she has occupied since
the war in June.
The fact that agreement on the
conference was reached so swiftly
was seen by authoritative Arab ob-
servers as indicating a new climate
DeGaulle Asks
For Israeli
Withdrawal
PARIS, (JTA)--President
Charles DeGaulle, launch-
ing his most bitter attack
against Israel, called the
country a "war-like state
determined to expand on
any pretext."
He declared that the only solu-
tion to the Middle East problem
must be one based on the evacua-
tion of Israel "from territories
taken by force" and agreed to by
the big powers � United States,
Russia, Great Britain and France.
The French President spoke be-
fore more than 1,000 newsmen, dip-
lomats and members of the govern-
ment who packed the Elysee Palace
Continued on Page Twelve
News Highlights
ALLON REQUESTS FORTIFICATION
TEL AVIV, (JTA) � Gen. Yigal Allon, a hero
of Israel's War of Liberation in 1948 and Minister
of Labor in the Israel Government, called for the
"rapid consolidation and fortification of Israel's pres-
ent borders" to counter the stand taken by President
Nasser of Egypt in his bellicose speech to the Egyptian
National Assembly.
Gen. Allon said that the Nasser
speech was " an aggressive attempt
to cover up a pathetic situation,"
but he warned that' * we cannot ignore
his threats." Israel's cease-fire
FIVE
NO NOTICE REQUIRED for WITHDRAWAL
OUR DIVIDENDS ARE NOT SUBJECT TO STATE INCOME TAX
SAVINGS INSURED BY A U.S. GOV'T AGENCY
SEND for FREE SAVE-BY-MAIL KIT ^^StSE^
HOME OWNERS FEDERAL SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
21 MILK ST. Boston HU 2-0630 MAIN OFFICE
borders are more secure today, he
said, but new settlements should be
established in strategic areas.
(In London, the Israel Chief of
Staff, Gen. Itzhak Rabin, told British
newsmen, that Israel was "ready for
any eventuality." He said it was
"a bad thing that Nasser wants war,
but it is a good thing for people
to realize that he does." He said
that "we hope for peace, but we
are prepared for war.")
(Gen. Rabin reported that some
of the war material which Egypt had
received from the Soviet Union since
the June war was superior to the
equipment the Egyptian Army had
used before the hostilities.)
JARRING AT U.N.
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (JTA)�
Ambassador Gunnar Jarring, who
will be the Secretary - General's
special representative in the Middle
East, conferred here with U Thant
_____ Continued on Page Twelve
RE 4-5000
RED CAB
of unity among Arab governments.
Weeks of bickering passed before
Arab leaders agreed to hold their
last conference in August at Khar-
toum, in the Sudan.
The meeting in December, like the
one in August, is expected to be
boycotted by the extreme left-wing
Government of Syria, although the
head of the Arab League's secre-
tariat Sayed Nofal, announced with-
out qualification that "agreement
had been reached" that leaders
should convene not later than, De-
cember 9.
Mr. NofaTs announcement, made
through the Egyptian government
press agency, named both Cairo
and Rabat as possible meeting plac-
es, but Rabat was considered the
likelier choice. The conference is
expected to be preceded by a two-
day meeting of foreign ministers.
The convening of the conference
was given impetus by President
Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt in a
speech to the Egyptian National As-
sembly on Thursday. Addressing
the Arab world, he said "the de-
cision of the Security Council repre-
sents a development that we have
to discuss and examine together."
Mr. Nasser termed the resolution
"not sufficient" as a basis for
peace in the Middle East.
One of the points expected to be
discussed by Arab leaders is how to
Continued on Page Six
Israel Bonds Aims For
Record Sale Of $1 Million
The $1 million objective of Action Day for Israel
can be achieved following the record Israel Bond
sales in fifty communities throughout Greater Boston
last Sunday, it was announced this week by Lawrence
G. Laskey, general chairman, State of Israel Bonds.
For the rest of this week, vol-
unteers are expected to call on
prospects so that complete and full
coverage will be obtained�for the
purpose of selling as many Israel
Bonds as possible. This coming
Sunday is Report Sunday, the final
day in the Action Day effort, and
the last opportunity to achieve the
$1 million goal for Israel, Mr.
Laskey said.
Never in the history of the com-
munity has there been such an
outpouring of cooperation to help
strengthen Israel's war-weakened
economy through the purchase of
Israel Bonds, Mr. Laskey pointed
out.
Besides the veritable army of
men and women volunteers who vis-
ited Jewish families, scores of per-
sons went to Action Day headquart-
ers to make their purchases. It was
an unprecedented community-wide
response to Israel's urgent request
for increased amounts of Israel
Bond dollars to bolster the economy
that was dealt a severe blow by the
crisis of mobilization and war.
The volunteers were young,
middle-aged and old. Some of them
have worked for Israel in every
Action Day conducted in the com-
munity. For some it was the first
time as a volunteer. There were
many volunteers who worked in the
early Action Days�and after an
absence of several years and be-
cause of Israel's dire need for in-
vestment dollars�worked as vol-
unteers last Sunday. For all, there
was the common bond�to work
for Israel by selling Israel Bonds
to help strengthen Israel.
Continued on Page Twelve
Arab Refugee
Family Reunion
Plan Begins
JERICHO ~ Israel re-
admitted a handful ofpros-
perous Arabs to the West
Bank as she inaugurated
a new program for the re-
union of families divided
by the Six-Day War of June.
Seven persons crossed the Allenby
Bridge to the West Bank area,
while the usual daily flow of about
200 departing Arabs crossed in the
opposite direction.
Continued on Page Twelve
State Of Affairs: by emanuel goldberg
Romney Religion
The other day, a British newspaperman wrote
an article about George Romney which attempted
to explain the Michigan Governor's "unabashed search
for morality" and seeming preoccupation with religion.
It's an unmistakable sign of new times
when experts have to dissect such
motivation for the curious public, es- .
pecially when Romney critic scan remark B Jm
that "there's too much of an All-
American look of integrity and clean I
living about the Romney image."
The Governor was described as a man with the
zeal of a preacher and the determination never
to make a major decision "without kneeling in
Continued on Page Twelve